56 GEúRGIA I . <>< ..:.;,."."' ".r ' ...: , ' .': "....,.,.. . v . "" \:" ( ... ., .. Itt , t : ,I . ... t. .... x> :. .r: I. \ 'ë- ': 4' 1. '\ 1<'" -.' 't 1 ' 'h A- ...)- ,.. 1:...z. ' 'o< --- , i: :f.'+4Y>">!. h r:Lk"' t\) .... '^'^< "<- y')O' ....... NN".( Ñ)o .... t;;^ -t:^ ,.. , " ., .,: "' . .... :.. :--:,:..., ..: '.:. 11 :.$. :...;-:::........... .....(.. '. :.:"K .., . . :.:%. . ... .;<.'-.... ::".. ...... . ,,#:.. ,,'.<': . . *,,: ,., POOL AND BEACH BECKON! The handsome Sea Island Beach Club has an irregular shaped pool, glass ,vindbreaks, lounges and patios. Sea Island, a year-round resort, has excel- lent sports facilities and every luxury for its congenial clientele. Reasonable American Plan rates. "VeIl appointed homes for lease. THE CLOISTER SEA ISLAND, GEORGIA Write direct for Booklet IF see travel aaent or call our Reservation Offìces- i N. Y.: 630 5th Ave., CIrcle 5-8035; in Phila.: 123 S. Broad St , PE. 5-31 3. for every mood ". , . . f ::'\: : i }ß ' \: ';.}:.. ,:,:: '1 .1)" ,; .j '. ..i. '.'" vj <..: r ..;: !1" ..: " < I .... . . (.:::. . :"".... ". .. .:,* :L. "<; . ,' . . <. ....: "': >:- . .' L . . ::. "." .." ....... ". : :Xi '.::. ..we..... . .:>. .." ... .. no ..::::::.....: ..::... ....: .. ..' ...... . .. . . .. ^.'. .:$;'"..::"....- .."'-::' . . '"':... .,. .. .. . .. .... . : . :.. .. . . .t d '9. . ,. , . . . .,. :......:.\ .t"-. .:- :.-:... . < . <::.. .:..... .. . '., <:. ' .,' :.=,.:,, :, . ,.>',..' "'f\"._"r",:,,,\ t !': ' . ,II f I I a.navox ,I I III-f t *'14 . . t .",. Better sight... better sound... better buy vice-president of the United Press should be in the forefront of this par- ticular battle surprises me a little, for not long ago, while I was in Korea, a U.P. man wrote a story in which he said that the correspondents there were of the unanimous opinion that the pub- lic-information and censorship setup was ;., just dandy. In preparing the story, in- cidentally, he neglected to solicit the views of all his brother-correspondents, some of whom would have urged him to substItute some less sweeping word f " . " 0 . f or unanImous. ne recent pOInt 0 dissension between the press and the military has been the correspondents' conviction that the Communists would enjoy a propaganda advantage as the result of their having several photog- raphers at the preliminary meetings at Kaesong and our having only a single Army corporal to take pictures. In ex- planation of how this disparity could work against the United Nations, the World-Telegram &J Sun ran a story on July 9th that dwelt bitterly upon one shot that the corporal (and possi- bly the Communists, too) had made. It showed two American colonels riding in a Communist jeep while a Com- munist officer perched behind, looking down on them. The lV orld-Telegram thought this picture might convey the notion that the colonels were pris- oners of the man looming behind them. "The Communists, had they been asked, no doubt would have ex- plained that the seats of honor were being given to the vIsitors and that the Red officer was riding on the rough rear edge of the jeep," the T ele gram said, ignoring the fact that in jeep circles there is only one seat of honor, that alongside the driver, which is widely recognized not mere- ly as the ranking one but the one ^$ easiest on the kidneys-a seat that in this instance was occupied by a Communist officer. "But pictures, unfortunately, will "'^ not give that impression to the <' <8 rest of the world." Maybe not, hut that particular pic- ture gave no other impression to the M'lrror, an uncom- monly alert journal when it comes to Comm unist trIcks, which ran it with the unamplified caption "Envoys Ride to Parley in U. S. Style." Besides if the lV orld- T ele gram is really so concerned ahout how people are going to interpret photographs, It seems odd that it hasn't objected to an A.P. Radiophoto published here on July 9th, which showed Governor Dewey and General Ridgway examining a document identified as Ridgway's reply to one of the Communist radio mes- sages that preceded the negotiations The inference could be drawn from this shot that Ridgway had submitted his message to Dewey for approval, and surely the T ele gram ought to be dIs- traught ahout something that could be interpreted by naïve and impressionable people as partisan political interference in grave affairs of state. The expenses of Dewey's current jaunt are being paid by Collier's, and I'll bet it was a relief to the permanent Collier's repre- sentatives in Ridgway's territory- especially after watching Bartholomew move in on his boys-when the Gover- nor, instead of covering the cease-fire sessions, stayed only briefly in Korea and then pushed along back to Japan and on to the less competitive territory of Formosa The W orld- T eLe gram story about jeep protocol wasn't attributed to any source. It may have come in by way of the U.P., with which the paper is affiliated, or it may have been furnished by Jim Lucas, the Scripps- Howard man over there, who has an in- imitable style, which was typified by the lead paragraph of one of his most recent stories: "At least we were certain of one thing-the kid never knew what hIt <....: him." While I was in Korea, writing a piece on the typewriter I had been using almost daily for the better part of three months, I came across a Lucas story In which, to impress on his readers how bad the dust there can be, he broke al1 records for dust stories by stating that a typewriter exposed to it lasted only two days. Lucas, as it happened, had Just lost a typewriter-it was ap- parently stolen-but he didn't men- tion this in the story. I could see what he was up to, though; he was cov- ering himself with the home office in case the Scripps-Howard executive in charge of expense accounts should accuse him of irre- sponsibility. E VIDENTLY, one of the most rousing battles that the correspondents in Korea have been having with the armed forces up to this writing- July 13th-was precipitated by the military's misleading reference to Kaesong as an open city, though it con tained a good deal of armed Communist soldiery, and by the military's subsequent attempt to prevent the press from reporting on this boner. The leader of the enraged fourth estate in this skirmish appears to have been Fred Sparks, of the Chicago Daily N ews-a singular reporter for several